Publication | Closed Access
The ion fractions of 2–10 keV lithium, sodium and potassium scattered from a copper (100) surface
62
Citations
17
References
1982
Year
Materials ScienceSolid-state IonicEngineeringIon ExchangeSurface SciencePrimary EnergyChemisorptionAtomic PhysicsIon ProcessAnalytical ChemistryIon FractionsChemistryKev LithiumElemental MetalIon FractionElectrochemistryIon StructureElectrochemical Surface Science
Abstract The ion fractions of lithium, sodium and potassium scattered from a copper (100) surface have been measured as a function of several experimental parameters. The ion fraction appears to be almost independent of the final energy, i.e. independent of the type of scattering trajectory at or below the surface. This means that the alkali ions can be used very well in several cases when experimental data are to be compared with theoretical scattering models. Typical values of the ion fraction are: 63% for lithium, 76% for sodium and 99% for potassium (values are given for a primary energy of 5 keV). A comparison of the results has been made with a theory based on ideas developed for the adsorption and scattering of very low energy alkali particles. A qualitative agreement has been found for the dependence of the ion fraction on the ionization energy of the alkali atoms and the (slight) variation with the primary energy.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1